Take time to DO CHARITY...
It is the key to heaven.
Words and actions I try to live by.
Sights, sounds and living at the Jersey Shore. From Mansions to sand castles, waterfront or waterviews, condos or town houses. This blog is created as an interactive resource for all your real estate needs and concerns and as a venue for sharing stories about the Jersey Shore and its towns, a place I love. Feel free to add your voice to this forum. I want you to be heard.
The Act would:
Eliminate the current statutory 3% minimum down payment on FHA loans, reducing a significant barrier to homeownership. FHA's existing down payment requirement does not meet the demands of today's marketplace, where most first-time homebuyers put down 2% or less. FHA would also offer a variety of down payment options.
Create a new, risk-based insurance premium structure for FHA that would match the premium amount with the credit profile of the borrower. FHA would have the flexibility to charge a lower premium for low-risk borrowers.
Increase and simplify FHA's loan limits. FHA's loan limit in high-cost areas would rise from 87% to 100% of the Government Sponsored Entity conforming loan limit. In lower-cost areas from 48% to 65% of the conforming loan limit.
In many areas of the country, the existing FHA limits are lower than the cost of new construction, eliminating FHA financing as an option for buyers of new homes in those markets.
Truths to Remember
1. Faith is the ability not to panic
2. If you worry you didn't pray. If you pray don't worry
3. Blessed are the flexible for they shall not be bent out of shape.
4. Do the math. Count your Blessings.
5. Dear God: I have a problem. It's me.
6. Silence is often misinterpretated, but never misquoted.
7. Laugh every day, it's like inner jogging.
8. The most important things in your home are the people and non people (pets)
9. Growing old is inevitable, growing up is optional.
10. There is no key to happiness. The door is alway OPEN
11. A grudge is a heavy thing to carry.
12. He who dies with the most toys....... is still DEAD
13. We do no remember days we remember moments. Life moves too fast, so enjpy your precious MOMENTS
14. Nothing is real, until you experience it; otherwise it's just hear say.
15. Its all right to sit on your pity pot every now and again......................................Just be sure to flush it when you're done.
16. Surviving and living your life successfully requires courage. The goals and dreams you're seeking require courage and risk taking. Learn from the turtle, it only make progress when it sticks out its neck.
17. Be more concerned with your character than you reputation. Your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.
"Author unknown"
Bill Gates recently gave a speech at a high School about 11 things they did not and will not learn in school. He talks about how feel-good, politically correct teachings created a generation of kids with no concept of reality and how this concept set them up for failure in the real world.
Rule 1: Life is not fair - get used to it!
Rule 2: The world won't care about your self esteem. The world will expect you to accomplish something BEFORE you feel good about yourself.
Rule 3: You will NOT make $60,000 a year right out of high school. You won't be a vice-president with a car phone until you earn both.
Rule 4: If you think your teacher is tough, wait till you get a boss.
Rule 5: Flipping burgers in NOT beneath your dignity. Your Grandparents had a different word for burger flipping: they called it opportunity.
Rule 6: If you mess up, it's not your parents' fault, so don't whine about your mistakes, learn from them.
Rule 7: Before you were born, your parents weren't as aboring as they are now. They got that way from paying your bills, cleaning your clothes and listening to you talk about how cool you thought you were. So before you save the rain forest from the parasites of your parent's generation, try delousing the closet in your own room.
Rule 8: Your school may have done away with winners and losers, but Life HAS NOT. In some schools, they have abolished failing grades and they'll give you as MANY ITEMS as you want to get the right answer. This doesn't bear the slightest resemblance to ANYTHING in Real Life.
Rule 9: Life is not divided not semesters. You don't get summers off and very few employers are interested in helping you FIND YOURSELF> Do that on your own time.
Rule 10: Television is NOT real life. In real life people actually have to leave the coffee shop and go to jobs.
Rule 11: Be nice to nerds. Chances are you'll end up working for one.
Example Memory Box Painted by Juanita
Example Memory Box Painted by Catherine LaPointe
Example Memory Box Painted by Cheryl Buotte Hopkinson
Toss After Seven Years
Item:
Item: Appraisals
Exception: If you donated the item to charity or sold the item, keep appraisal and related documents for at least seven years.
Item: Bank account statements (that include alimony payments you received)
Exception: If you aren't going to sue for back alimony, you can destroy these after the payments have stopped and the person paying alimony dies.
Item: Birth certificate (certified copy)
Item: Brokerage statements (stocks, bonds and mutual funds)
Exception: After you sell the stock, bond or shares of a mutual fund, keep the statements for seven years.
Item: Citizenship papers
Item: Closing statements (related to property you've sold or to rental income from real estate)
Item: Confirmation slips (from the purchase or sale of securities)
Exception: After you sell the stock, bond or shares of a mutual fund, keep the confirmation slips for seven years.
Item: Custody agreement(s)
Exception: Once all of your children have turned 18, you can throw out any custody agreements.
Item: Deed(s)
Exception: Keep even if you sell the property -- you never know when you'll be hit with a lawsuit.
Item: Deferred-compensation agreements
Item: Divorce decree(s)
Item: Distributions from tax-deferred retirement plans
Item: Financial aid documents
Exception: After the student has graduated and begun repaying loans, keep the documents for at least one year.
Item: Gift-tax returns
Item: Home improvement receipts
Item: Home inventory
Item: IRS Form 942
Item: IRS Form 2119
Item: IRS Form 4070A
Item: IRS Form 5498
Item: IRS Form 8606
Item: IRS W-2 forms
Item: Lawsuits or other legal actions
Item: Marriage certificate (certified copy)
Item: Medical records
Item: Military records (including discharge papers)
Item: Partnership agreements
Item: Paycheck stubs (the last one you receive each year)
Item: Pension plan documents
Item: Power of attorney
Item: Property-related paperwork
Exception: If you sell your home and don't roll over your profit/gain to the next house you purchase, you can toss the following seven years after the sale: title, insurance policy, purchase price, settlement or closing costs, cost of any improvements, casualty losses you've deducted and insurance reimbursements for casualty losses.
Item: Religious documents (ketubah, baptism certificate)
Item: Retirement plan contributions
Item: S corporation documents
Item: Separation agreement
Item: Stock certificates
Item: Service agreements (in effect)
Item: Stock option agreements
Exception: Keep until you've exercised them; then keep for at least seven years.
Item: Tax returns
This information is for informational use only. Consult your accountant, lawyer etc for professional advice.
Sources: Canby, Maloney & Company, Framingham, Mass.; Cleveland Financial Group, Cleveland, Ohio; Dennis & Dennis, Rancho Bernardo, Calif.; Financial Planning Association; Larry Foster, CPA/PFS and partner, Richard A. Eisner and Company, New York; IRS publications. Better Homes & Garden Article.
Federal Ubiquitous up and down the East Coast. Federal style architecture dates from the late 1700's and coincided with the reawakening of interest in classical Greek and Roman culture. There's an appealing plainness and symmetry about federal houses. Red brick is the most commonbuilding material. Doors often have sidelights and fan lights and whatever is happening on the right side of the facade is echoed on the left. Doublehung windows and shutters are common as is a certaine restraiend classical ornamentation around cornices, doors and windows.
Tudor is the architecture most popular in the 1920's and 1930's and continues to be a mainstay in suburbs across the nation. The defining characteristics are half timebering on bay windows and upperfloors and facades that are dominated by one or more steeply pitched cross gables. Patterned brick or stone walls are common, as are rounded doorways, multipaned casement windows and large stone chimeneys.
Prairie In suburban chicago in 1893, Frank LLyod Wright, Americas most famous architect, designe dthe first Prairie style house and it's still a common style throughout the Midwest. Prairie houses come in two styles - boxy and symmetrical or low slung and assymterical. Roofs are low pitched, with wide eaves. Brick and clapboard are the most common building materials. Other details: rows of casement windows, one story porches with massive square supports and stylized floral and circular geometrid terra cotta or masonry ornamentation around door, windows and cornices.
Spanish Most common in the Southwest and Florida. Spanish style architecture takes its cues from the missions of the early Spanish missionaaries - such as the one at San Juan Capistrano in California (if you get a chance to go there it is great - swallows come back every year to nest and there is a train station where you can have lunch and shop) and includes details from the Moorish, Byzantine, Gothis, and Rennaissance architectural styles. The houses usually have low pitched tiled roofs, white stucco walls and rounded windows and doors. Other elements may include scalloped dormer, windows and balconies with elaborate grillwork, decorative tiles around the doorways and windows and a bell tower or two.
From the guru of agency, John Reilly: Regarding the Bright Analysis by Lisa Sturtevant, PhD Bright Chief Economist Our analysis shows that t...